There are numerous ways in which
instructors can promote community in asynchronous online learning environments.
One very effective way is by using discussion boards. Discussion boards help
students connect with each other and can lead to deeper understanding of
content material. Instructors should encourage students to interact with each
other by requiring students to not only respond to a question or topic prompt
provided by the teacher but also to respond to each other. By encouraging students
to communicate with each other and ask each other questions, the instructor is building
community. The instructor can also facilitate conversations by responding to
students as well and encouraging students to answer the questions asked by
their peers.
Another way to build community in
online learning is by using collaborative learning techniques such as small
group work and peer review. Many collaborative techniques have been adapted for online
environments. A couple examples of these technique adaptations are Jigsaw and
Think Aloud Pair Problem Solving (TAPPS). In Jigsaw students work in groups to
learn a topic before teaching it to another group. In TAPPS students solve a
problem and explain their reasoning to a peer.
A third way to build community is
by modeling social presence and encouraging students to engage and be
themselves. When instructors introduce themselves, communicate with students, and
provide feedback on assignments, students will recognize that the teacher is
engaged in their learning. Also, by asking students to provide introductions of
themselves, the instructor gets to know each of them, and they get to know
their peers. Through introductions and continued interactions, students can connect
with their instructor and their peers which will help them feel more
comfortable in the “classroom”. Students who feel comfortable communicating
with their instructor and their peers will be more engaged in the course
content.
I genuinely love when my professors’
model social presence. I feel like when instructors show that they are human
and not just an authority name on a screen, proves that they care about their
students which is much harder to show in online learning. However, I feel like
this mostly helps the student-teacher relationship and not the whole online
community. For the entire classroom community building, I believe discussion boards to be most
beneficial to foster interactions between students. By requiring interaction
between students and encouraging continued discussion, students can connect
with each other and course material in deeper meaningful ways. Discussion
boards can even be designed similar to social media to appeal more to younger
students.
I really enjoyed reading your post, Missi! The formal register that you used throughout helped to convey your points in an easily understood manner, which can be super important in the context of a blog to keep readers’ interest. Something that I learned from your post was the idea of TAPPS and Jigsaw, which I did not know were available resources prior to your post. I would love to know more about your own experiences with online learning. Did any of your online teachers in the past use TAPPS or other strategies that you mentioned, and if so, what was your experience with them? Thank you for your post, I will keep TAPPS and Jigsaw in mind for asynchronous learning strategies in the future!
ReplyDeleteI really liked your input and ideas for creating a good community in online learning. I haven't really worked with the collaborative tools online yet so thank you for giving me information on those! I am curious though about the discussion boards. Do you think that requiring a response to DB's is always successful in engagement or do some students simply wing a response to get the credit? I have personally seen this a lot and most questions that comments asks on DB go unanswered as the author never goes back to read them.
ReplyDelete